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Andrew Mason’s loss may just be Groupon’s gain — at least as far as its shareholders are concerned.

Groupon’s stock price got a rapid and marked boost in after-hours trading today in the first minutes after it was announced that longtime CEO Andrew Mason has been ousted from the company. Within the first minutes of the news, Groupon’s stock had shot up as high as 12 percent from the $4.53 per share price at which it closed the official trading day. The stock hit an after-hours high of $5.10 at 4:20pm Eastern Time, according to the NASDAQ.

Share prices change by the second, of course, so it’s a bit of a horse race to obsessively monitor how the market responds to big news like this (Groupon’s own after-hours rally has since slowed down.) But the fact that there was a tangible initial pop shows that some investors see Mason’s ousting as a positive step.

Though many staffers at Groupon will certainly be sad to see Mason go, he personally seems to be taking today’s events in stride. In a very candid memo to Groupon employees that has been posted online, Mason said that his removal as CEO was justified:

“I was fired today. If you’re wondering why… you haven’t been paying attention. From controversial metrics in our S1 to our material weakness to two quarters of missing our own expectations and a stock price that’s hovering around one quarter of our listing price, the events of the last year and a half speak for themselves. As CEO, I am accountable.”

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OverviewGroupon is a deal-of-the-day website that offers discounted gift certificates usable at local or national companies. It is known as an online e-commerce platform that provides its users with the ability to purchase anything.
By leveraging the company’s global relationships and scale, Groupon offers consumers a vast marketplace of unbeatable deals all over the world. Users have the ability to discover …

BioAndrew Mason is the founder of Groupon as well as The Point, the collective action platform from which Groupon was born.Andrew is originally from Mt. Lebanon, Pennsylvania. Mason moved to Chicago in 1999 to attend Northwestern University and graduated with a degree in music. He went on to attend University of Chicago's Harris School of Public Policy only to drop out three months later.